Posted on 10/19/2007 6:51:06 PM PDT by RedRover
Camp Pendleton, California U.S. Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey R. Chessani and Lance Corporal Stephen B. Tatum will face general courts-martial for their roles in a controversial firefight following an al Qaeda-led insurgent ambush in Haditha, Iraq almost three years ago in which 24 Iraqi citizens died.
Also on trial is whether combatants caught in a no-quarter duel can be successfully prosecuted for the life or death decisions they make in the white-hot crucible of combat.
The decision to bring the two Marines to courts-martial was made by Lieutenant General James N. Mattis, the convening authority in the case and its final arbiter. He upheld the recommendation of the investigating officer in Chessanis case to charge him with dereliction of duty and violation of a lawful order. Mattis overrode the decision of the investigating officer in Tatums case to dismiss all the charges including multiple counts of unpremeditated murder - against the veteran enlisted Marine.
Instead, Mattis referred charges against Tatum for involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and aggravated assault. He dismissed charges of murder and negligent homicide against the survivor of the horrific Hell House fight at Fallujah, Iraq in November 2004.
The generals decision brought an immediate reaction from the defense lawyers.
Referring this case to trial imperils every young Marine and soldier who faces a split second decision in combat, according to a statement from veteran Marines Jack Zimmerman and Kyle R. Sampson, the Houston, Texas attorneys who represent Tatum. Zimmerman, a former infantryman, was decorated for valor twice while serving in Vietnam.
Chessani, a career Marine infantryman, is the former commanding officer of 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines. Chessani is charged with dereliction of duty and violation of a lawful order for failing to accurately report and investigate the incident.
His battalion was attacked in a coordinated al Qaeda-led complex ambush on December 19, 2005, the Marine Corps says. During the engagement one Marine was killed and 11 others were wounded. According to intelligence information gleaned from Iraqi informants and captured insurgents the insurgents plan was to attack the battalion in several locations simultaneously to cause maximum carnage among Iraqi civilians.
Chessanis attorneys at the Thomas More Law Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan, said they are particularly disappointed with the decision to bring their client to trial because of the chilling effect the case has on the militarys sacrosanct chain of command.
Attorney Brian Rooney, himself a Marine combat veteran and one of the attorneys representing Chessani said second-guessing the actions of combatants is tantamount to the Soviet commissar theory of command. During the Communist era of the former Soviet Union political officers called commissars could countermand the orders of combat leaders in the name of political expediency.
You might as well have a political officer in every battalion to make sure every order is politically correct, Rooney said.
Both Marines had been in combat in Iraq in al Anbar Province during two deployments when the Haditha incident occurred. The incident began when a squad from Kilo Company, 3/1 was ambushed December 19, 2005 on a road at the outskirts of Haditha. In the ensuing day-long fight 24 Iraqi citizens were killed in the cross-fire between insurgents and counter-attacking Marines.
Three months later the attack was brought to light in a series of inaccurate and highly inflammatory reports initiated by a March 6, 2006 article in Time Magazine by reporter Tim McGirk. His report and those that followed claimed the Marines had killed the Iraqis in cold-blood in retaliation for the death of Lance Corporal Miguel Terrazas. The story was picked up by Pennsylvania Congressman John Murtha, who went on international television to claim the Marines had killed the Iraqis for revenge.
The furor generated by the reports and Murthas outlandish rhetoric sparked two separate investigations of the battalions actions. Last December those investigations resulted in the charging of eight Marines with murder, assault, and dereliction of duty for allegedly covering up the crimes. Subsequently four of those Marines were exonerated.
During the summer-long Article 32 investigatory hearings at Camp Pendleton the hearing officers charged with looking into the matter determined no murders had been committed.
So far Chessani and Tatum are the only 3/1 Marine ordered to courts-martial in the incident. Three other Marines, including Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich, the squad leader of the ambushed squad, still face the possibility of general court-martial.
Wuterich is waiting to discover whether he will be charged with 17 counts of unpremeditated murder and uttering a false statement. Lt. Col. Paul Ware, the investigating officer in his case, recommended that the murder charges be reduced to seven counts of negligent homicide. Mattis can accept the investigating officers recommendations, ignore them, or charge him with other offenses.
One source close to the investigation said Friday afternoon that Wuterich is expected to learn his fate sometime next week. In addition, a junior officer, Lieutenant Andrew Grayson, must still undergo ab Article 32 investigation to determine whether there is enough evidence to bring them to trial for dereliction of duty.
Despite Mattis decision to bring the two Marines to trial their lawyers remain confident they will be exonerated.
We are very disappointed that the Commanding General did not follow the recommendation to withdraw and dismiss all charges made by the experienced trial judge who heard all the evidence during the Article 32 Investigation, Tatums attorneys said. However, Lance Corporal Tatum did not commit any crime, and we will take the fight to the courtroom. We will vigorously challenge the government's case, and nothing will be left undone in defense of this fine young Marine.
We remain convinced that the military justice system eventually will reach the right result, they concluded.
Rooney offered similar sentiments.
We expect that Lieutenant Colonel Chessani will be fully exonerated when this goes to trial. While we are disappointed with the decision we look forward to going to court-martial to show that no stone was left unturned and nothing was swept under the rug in an effort to discover the truth of what happened at Haditha, Rooney said.
AMEN, BROTHER!!!
I wonder who the next convening officer will be ?
I wonder who he will appoint to each tribunal ?
hoping it’s all sh$t-storm combat vets for both.
Hey Girl;
Any reason you see why Tatum is being hit harder on the charges than Wuterich?
...and yet they still do!
That is why I love my troops so much!
We don’t yet know what Mattis will do about SSgt Wuterich’s charges. They could be the same.
We stay the course, Red, anything less diminishes us all.
It’ll be LtGen Samuel Helland.
Yes thank G*d, I just hate PCism making them fight with one hand tied behind thier back. The American fighting man has ALWAYS been courageous in battle and generous in victory, they do not need the sum sucking lawyers second guessing every damn move they make.
I hate PCism too.
That is why I thank GOD!
Until victory is ours. And it will be.
Absolutely, Smooth, and all!
Your right I shouldn’t be assuming anything at this point.
Just got an email a ferw minutes ago from Jeff... he said, “Good afternoon. This afternoon I found out that the General has referred my case to court martial.”... “God is good and He is in control. “... and asked for prayers...
Hate to say it, but that's the only way to make sense out of this abomination. There is simply no excuse for what Mattis has done here.
Congratulations, General, on your fourth stinking star. For what?
I have joined you also - been doing that all day. This is horrible, horrible news. We are still waiting on the decision for Frank and my gut tells me that he will also face court martial for doing the job he was trained to do. I am at a loss for words, I am at wits end, tired of all of this, when will it end?
Pray for all of them!
It bothers me intensely that these men are told to stand off, watching from the overwhelming solace of the sea while their families stand vigil, alone, in agony on the pier, while the joyous sounds of reunions cut into them like a knife.
Aye, we will win, and these men will come home to their families to stay, and be honored for the rest of their lives for protecting us, and they will be blessed for their righteous and selfless acts.
Most of our prayers have already been answered, and I have faith the plan for the rest will be made aware to us soon.
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